David: This is particularly true if one makes the mistake of mixing Oriental pins with standard or German pins. The profile of the pin-end is quite different with threading starting at quite different places, so that friction at the bottom of the pin is dramatically increased. P In a message dated 11/29/2009 4:42:56 P.M. Central Standard Time, davidlovepianos at comcast.net writes: It can also happen if the new oversized pin bottoms out where the original pin stopped. That area below the original pin is still the diameter designed for the original pin so when the new oversized pin gets down there it's too tight and worse, it's too tight at the bottom of the pin. David Love www.davidlovepianos.com -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Al Guecia/AlliedPianoCraft Sent: Sunday, November 29, 2009 8:31 AM To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: [pianotech] Oversized tuning pins Scott, Yes, that's one of the possible causes, but there are others. Removing the old pins and creating to much heat (burning the hole). New tuning pins to large. And I'm sure there are hacks out there that can screw it up in other ways. Al -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20091129/067f0e89/attachment.htm>
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